Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Ground zero of AAP surge, Malwa swings Cong way

Politicall­y volatile belt turns out to be nemesis of AAP and SADBJP

- Sukhdeep Kaur

CHANDIGARH :It was Malwa that set the tone for change in Punjab. The ground zero of surge of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in the state in the 2014 Lok sabha polls, Malwa was AAP’s best bet to claim Punjab.

Of 34 assembly segments that it won in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, 32 were in Malwa alone and the remaining two in Doaba. But the politicall­y volatile belt turned out to be the political nemesis of both the AAP and the SAD-BJP alliance this time.

Of the total 69 seats, the Congress has bagged 40 leaving just eight for the SAD, one for the BJP, 18 for the AAP and two for its ally, the Lok Insaaf Party (LIP) of the Bains brothers. Which means out of the 32 seats it won in Malwa in 2014 polls, the AAP, along with LIP, could win just 20 and went down by 12 seats.

The Malwa downfall would puzzle the party as it assesses its loss. The AAP had gained maximum traction in Malwa, the epicentre of Sikh anger over sacrilege incidents of Guru Granth Sahib and the power centre of the Badal family, mainly among youth voters and NRIs, besides the extreme left (read naxals) and the extreme right (Sikh radicals).

It had fuelled anti-incumbency sentiments of people angry over the high-handedness of Akali halqa in-charges and sarpanches and Badal buses rising roughshod on state highways. But AAP’s political fortunes, which had peaked a little too early before polls, floundered as rapidly. The propaganda of its political rivals that it was piggybacki­ng on radicals gained ground in the crucial final leg first owing to cardinal mistake of AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal of staying at the residence of a former Khalistani commando, and later in the wake of the Maur blast.

Coming one after the other, the two incidents were enough to scare Hindus and raise the hackles of moderate Sikhs. Then came the dera dice rolled by SAD president Sukhbir Badal. It cut both ways. It dented the dera vote of AAP and the Sikh vote of the Akalis. And the two together titled the scales in favour of the Congress.

The announceme­nt of Punjab Congress chief Captain Amarinder Singh as the party’s CM face may not have mattered but the peasantry seems to have not forgotten his unilateral act of ending the river waters agreement as CM. Besides, he even promised farmers a debt waiver and youth 50 lakh smart phones and jobs.

 ?? ANIL DAYAL/HT ?? Congress supporters celebratin­g the party victory in Fazilka on Saturday.
ANIL DAYAL/HT Congress supporters celebratin­g the party victory in Fazilka on Saturday.

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